Then it seems to be a trivial argument.Indeed that is the argument, I think, Wittgenstein is making - that there is indeed no such thing as a private language. — PuerAzaelis
If more than one person used them, then how does the language qualify as being "private"? So there is no such thing as a "private" language?The Private Language Argument for Five Year Olds: words are only of use if more than one person uses them. — Banno
This thread doesnt contain what you've said for years - only what you've said recently, which is inconsistent.Yeah, Thing is, I'm making the same point I have been making for years. — Banno
:up:Neither — Banno
Wait, I thought that:I wonder if folk just have a hard time accepting how bare being true is. It's this bareness, this lack of anything more, that is shown by the T-sentence.
If you believe something, then you believe that it is true. You can't belief it and yet think it false. — Banno
So which is it? Does knowing it or believing it make it true, and where does certainty fall? Is it possible to believe or know something that isn't true? If not, then why do humans frequently make the "mistake" of stating that they believe or know something and then find out later that it wasn't true? Why do we often find out after making the claim whether or not our knowledge was true or not? Maybe we were getting ahead of our selves and claim to possess knowledge when we didn't have proper justification. That may be the problem - that most people use "know" to casually - often meaning a belief or hypothesis rather than real knowledge. When someone claims to know something, is their knowledge evidence, or proof, that their claim is true? Is their claim that they have knowledge evidence, or proof, that they possess knowledge? Do you possess knowledge just by claiming that you do?Well, given that we know it, it follows that it is true. — Banno
They don’t. Instinct is innate and automatic, cognition is developed and reactive. — Mww
I was reflecting on your seemings, not mine.Ok, no problem. Everyone is entitled to his own seemings. — Mww
lol, so anti-realism defeats itself by rejecting it's own existence as a belief? A non-existent nihilist? :lol:Only actual antirealist position I can think of is outright nihilism, and from what I understand of that, no, minds and bodies (not even ones own) exist. — noAxioms
What do you mean by, "'existence of an objective reality" to say that it is meaningless?I personally have found 'existence of an objective reality' to be a meaningless concept, and hence see no reason to assert it, which is a little different than actively denying it, so I'm not sure if I qualify as an antirealist. — noAxioms
It seems like you're saying that one can be certain without any reasons or evidence for what they are certain about. That isn't how I or anyone else uses the term, "certainty". Now that I know that is how you are using the term, then I am going to expect you to provide evidence because now I can't be certain that what you are "certain" of is true. To be certain means that you put forth some mental effort to parse some bit of information for logical and empirical consistency before you say that you are certain of something. To say that you "know" is to say that you have good evidence, or justification for something but there could possibly be other explanations that you aren't aware of yet. It is a way of saying that you have a set of rules for explaining or interpreting something and those rules are amendable.I am pretty sure we all know people who are certain on almost no grounds at all. But the main point is that certainty is a term referring to a feeling, a quale. Knowledge is a term refering to a belief that one decides is likely to be true due to certain criteria. Sometimes, for example, we just can't face the idea that something is not true. Sometimes we can even admit this. I am certain she is cheating on me but I have no evidence. I trust my gut. — Coben
I'm not quite sure at what you're getting at here. Where would instincts fall into this explanation? Are instincts a form of knowledge? Does a newborn baby "know" how to root and grasp? Are these a priori or posteriori? Is there any sensibility for them in those actions?A priori is a relational determination in the human complementary cognitive system. It is merely in juxtaposition to a posteriori, the latter given from sensibility, the former absent sensibility. But absent sensibility itself has two conditions, absent immediate sensibility, or, that of which perception and its representations are not present at the time of cognition, and, absent any sensibility whatsoever in any time of cognition. — Mww
What would the phrases, "living under a rock", or "living in a bubble" mean for an anti-realist?I personally have found 'existence of an objective reality' to be a meaningless concept, and hence see no reason to assert it, which is a little different than actively denying it, so I'm not sure if I qualify as an antirealist. — noAxioms
Certainty is a measure of your conviction that you are right. You might be an idiot. Knowledge is presumably a rigorously arrived at belief. — Coben
What does "talking" mean if there isnt a medium that carries this information (that there is something called a physical world that contains cats) between minds?Nor need an antirealist deny that there is a physical world. It is open to them to say that if we talk as if there is a physical world, then by that very fact there is indeed a physical world. — Banno
In other words, anti-realism logically leads to solipsism. Where is this consensus taking place if not in the real world with real human beings? "Consensus" is a term lacking any meaning for an anti-realist.I understand 'antirealism' to mean that it useless to talk about the term 'reality' except in cases where consensenus is being sought as to 'what is the case'. Scientific paradigms are examples of where that consensus operates regarding successful prediction and control of events, and it is 'experienced events' which replace 'physical reality' for the antirealist. The traditional dichotomies like subjective/objective or mental/physical are misleading in understanding 'antirealism' because they are predicated on lay concepts of an observer independent reality. Such dichotomies are considered futile by philosophical pragmatists. — fresco
Yeah, thanks. I've learned quite a lot from that. It seems that there's an inherent idea that, at least, one of the differences between knowledge and information is based on some kind of judgement with respect to its significance to us, e.g. desirable/undesirable, valuable/useless, etc. — BrianW
Julius Caesar crossed the Rubicon. — tim wood
Julius Caesar crossed the Rubicon. — tim wood
Isn't it glorious to see all the rich varieties of side-stepping a direct question on these forums?...and here is Harry in a knutshell. Isn't it glorious to see the rich variety of thinking that is displayed in the forums?
Harry knows things that are not true. — Banno
Well, given that we know it, it follows that it is true.
But I don't think that you asked the question you meant to ask. — Banno
What I get from both Merriam-Webster's definition and the article you provided is that IF certainty and knowledge are not the same thing, then certainty is the carrier of truth, not knowledge. Certainty has a stronger quality of truth than knowledge. So you can't say that if "you know it then it is true" if you are implying that "certainty" and "knowledge" are distinct AND that certainty has a stronger connection with truth than knowledge does, according to the definition and the article. If you are certain, then it is true. If you know it, then it is justified yet you can still have doubts, or be open-minded to alternative possibilities that haven't been provided yet. True wisdom is often equated to knowing that you know nothing.Harry, have a read at this:
Certainty
Do you think that this article is adequately summed up by your Merriam-Webster definition?
What, in the article, do you find to disagree with?
Are you at all perturbed by my pointing out that on your account you know things that are not true? — Banno
Compare:
"He is certain there is a Santa, but of course that's not true"
with
"He knows there is a Santa, but of course that's not true".
All I am doing here is pointing to how the words are used; I'm not setting out which things are true, believed or known. — Banno
Seems that both words are used the same way, and therefore mean the same thing (if meaning is just use and all that) — Harry Hindu
..and this is why I don't pay much attention to your posts. — Banno
And like I already said in the post your cherry-picked and failed to respond to: How can we be certain that what we know is the truth? How does anyone know that some claim is the truth? We make claims all the time about our knowledge without having any proof that what we claim is true. We only have justification for our beliefs that qualify as knowledge. Without justification, it is simply a belief. How do we determine what qualifies as proper justification? - Logic.The problem is not that they are misusing the word - of course the word might be used in that way. The problem is that they fail to take into account an important distinction. In this case, Harry ignores the distinction between believing, which can be either true or false, and knowing, which by definition must be true. — Banno
known or proved to be true : INDISPUTABLE
it is certain that we exist — Merriam-Webster
Seems that both words are used the same way, and therefore mean the same thing (if meaning is just use and all that)But one cannot know stuff that is not true.
Compare:
"He is certain there is a Santa, but of course that's not true"
with
"He knows there is a Santa, but of course that's not true".
All I am doing here is pointing to how the words are used; I'm not setting out which things are true, believed or known. — Banno
Anyone who thinks that everything is matter, mind or information would be a monist.Does anybody these days still think everything is matter or everything is mind? Doesn’t seem all that logical to me. That is not to say dualists don’t still walk the Earth, but I rather think they are of the mind and matter kind, not one or the other. — Mww
Well sure, if the hard scientist and the metaphysician is a dualist, then they are at a loss to explan the interaction between matter and mind. Ignorance is the harm. Socrates said that knowledge is the greatest good and ignorance is the greatest evil. It basically comes down to whether or not you believe that reality is composed of one substance or more than one. Then you need to explain how different substances interact.And the metaphysician is at no more loss to explain the interaction between mind and matter than the hard scientist, so as long as they are equal in their ignorance, no harm is done in theorizing about it. Which has been done for millennia, and even if nothing substantial has come from it, nothing particularly detrimental has either. — Mww
Why do so many people on this forum plead to some authority? Was there a reference-able standing theory when Darwin proposed his theory of natural selection? No, his theory was the basis of a new idea that had no reference-able prior theories. It was based on his own observations of nature over several years. Instead of worrying about what some other human (who is in no better a situation than you or I in figuring out the relationship between mind and matter) thinks, focus on what I am saying.Is there a reference-able standing theory in support of the notion that information is everything? — Mww
Life is not a contradiction.Logic isn't to blame because most arguments tend to cite learned thinkers and the arguments that follow are good ones. So, in a very simplistic sense, the problem lies with the premises, the initial assumptions, the starting point of our reasoning. — TheMadFool
What does saying everything is "matter", or everything is "mind" do for us? It gives us a name to use to refer to the substance of reality so that we may communicate the idea of the substance of reality. It solves the problems of dualism - primarily the problem where dualists are unable to answer the question of how matter and mind interact.Ok, so everything is information. What does that do for us? What are we to do with that information? Is it sufficient from the fact everything is information, that no metaphysical arguments remain? — Mww
I'm talking about your mind - it's substance and arrangement. Your mind is an arrangement of information. Now, how does matter (if matter is not an arrangement of information, but of atoms) interact with that?The 'information' approach is still a little vague. If you could define what you mean by it, that would help me. If it's the stuff of information theory, then your theory sounds like a mathematical ontology. — jjAmEs
If Alice says, "My tooth hurts" (first-person) and Bob says, "Alice's tooth hurts" (third-person), then both are describing exactly the same thing - Alice's toothache. However neither Alice's nor Bob's description of her pain is the pain itself. — Andrew M
It looks like you're explaining things at the wrong level. Sure humans have legs, but they also have brains. Both of which were designed by natural selection. Some brains like to make their legs run, some don't. I'm guessing there are evolutionary advantages for those that like to run over those that don't. Joggers stay fit, non-joggers don't. Those that stay fit have a higher chance to pass their genes down to the next generation. Brains and their minds and how those brains establish preferences for other particular humans (kin selection), or for running over not running, are products of natural selection (evolutionary psychology).Necessary conditions aren't always explanatory. Legs don't explain why people like jogging and the ability to notice differences doesn't explain why racism exists. You're looking for an explanation at the wrong level. But if you want to continue to do so, I suggest the rest of us bow out now and just let you. — Baden
I get what you mean. It's not just a question of whether differences exist or not. It's also about whether people deem the difference to be, as you said, significant. I fully agree with this and fdrake's video post clearly demonstrates that race is an arbitrary concept with the caveat that it only looks like that based on genotype and not phenotype. The video clearly reveals the basis of racism as based on phenotype (external, physical appearance) and then demonstrates that these physical differences don't have a counterpart in genotype based on which all races are more similar than different. Clearly, racism is not a socio-political phenomenon as you claim: I've never heard a racist ask for social status or political affiliation before they start being racist. — TheMadFool
I'm not interested in having a biology vs. culture debate. The claim in the OP is that the mere fact of being able to recognize difference implies that racism is 'primal'. That's an incredibly dumb inference for reasons I pointed out. — StreetlightX
Still have no idea what you're on about. — StreetlightX
You're the one that doesn't know what they are talking about. Your daughter shares 50% of your genes compared others of a different race in which you share less. If this wasn't the case, then those genealogy commercials are a load of shit. How can they determine where your ancestors are from if we all share the same amount of similarities and differences?This doesn't follow at all, and it also happens to have the effect of attempting to naturalize racism, rather than recognizing it for the political phenomenon that it is. What matters is not difference simipliciter - there are as many differences between me and my daughter as there are between me and my other-raced friend - but differences deemeed significant or relevant in one way and not another. It's somewhat embarrasing that this needs to be said. — StreetlightX
If only this were true, we'd have no one in prison for violent crimes like rape or murder.Even something as basic as levels of aggression isn't encoded to a degree that can meaningfully override culture. — Baden
But that is what I'm saying. What does it mean to act white or black when there is already diversity of actions and needs and wants within those groups themselves?Sure. But let's say for sake of argument, since I don't know what to think about all this, that black people feel like the white people want them to act white and lose their identity in order to be accepted. — Marchesk
The majority doesnt necessarily oppress the minority. A constitutional republic, like in the U.S., is designed to protect the minority from majority oppression, unlike a full-blown democracy. There are plenty of blacks in positions of power (police officers, judges, etc.,) that could change my life for the worse they wanted to.To be more precise, the explanation was that majority populations for things like race, gender and orientation have had the power to oppress the other groups, and setup society to benefit the majority more so than others. However, the majority tends to not recognize how things continue to be that way, so it can be uncomfortable for the majority to confront the accounts of lived experience of discrimination form the groups not in power. — Marchesk
That all depends on how we group, or categorize, people. What do blacks want that would be different than what whites want? Don't we all want freedom and happiness? If we all want the same thing then why are we separating ourselves into different groups as if we want different things? It shouldn't matter what color the other person's skin is. It would only matter what our goals as human beings are.The stated goal is to move toward an equal society with no groups in power.
But our focus is to be race. — Marchesk
Does supremacy = majority? Were they aware that there are simply more whites than blacks and that it would be logical that more whites would be in positions of power than blacks? There is simply a larger pool of potential workers that are white and trying to hire an equal number of blacks would be difficult and misrepresenting the local population. What exactly are they advocating? Genocide?The two presenters spoke of causing harm during the workshop. Someone mentioned how we need to be careful not to create a safe space for the oppressors. The goal of the presenters in doing these workshops is to demolish white supremacy, the patriarchy and any other social structures that create inequality. By "white supremacy", they mean whiteness. — Marchesk
Interest is determined by your goals. What is interesting depends on the present goal in the mind. The only interest in knowing about the claims of long-dead philosophers is to know how far we've come since.Interest is judged by what is, not by what might not have been. It would be irrational to hold an interest in falsified theoretics of long-dead natural philosophers, but it isn’t irrational to hold an interest in theories metaphysicians create that empirical science cannot conclusively address. Don’t have to live and die by it to be interested in it. — Mww
Is it really indirect? How would you know? This seems to assume dualism.Can that really correlate to the predictions of cognitive neuroscience, if that paradigm has to with physical mechanics, but philosophy has to do only with simple human rational capabilities?
Don’t get me wrong. Science in general is both fascinating and quite useful. But I, a stand-alone thinking subject, am more concerned with what my mind does for my directly, however abstract that may be, than I am with what my brain does for my indirectly. — Mww
Unchanging causing change is as incoherent as something coming from nothing.That implies something atemporal must very probably exist in order to be the cause of time. — Devans99
See? You can't escape talking about God relative to the universe. You are implying space-time encompassing God and your universe, as God is located relative to the universe and expresses itself in time.Then I imagine the atemporal thing (God) off to the side (not on the plane) and a mapping between the atemporal thing and each point in the plane. Then the atemporal thing can express itself in spacetime without being part of spacetime. — Devans99
They exist only as imaginings in the human mind in this particular universe.But then if you think about all the universes in the multiverse, all the multiverses in reality and all of the different possible realities that might exist, it seems impossible that we would ever understand them all - so things with a drastically different nature very probably exist - including atemporal things. — Devans99
I dont know what you're talking about. Maybe you're talking about realtive change. There is more or less change in one area relative to another.Time enables change. Time is not change. If time was change then time would flow faster in the presence of change, yet SR indicates time slows down in the presence of change. — Devans99
But we can't know if they would say something differently. It would be more interesting to know what current philosophers think.If there is at least one long-dead philosopher who would hold with his claims given what is known today, then if he was interesting then, he would seem to be just as interesting now. Why would such long-dead philosopher give a crap about the claims neuroscientists and biologist are beginning to make, when his philosophy is not affected by them? — Mww
Of course you shouldn't be concerned about it normally. Only when discussing the mind-body relationship on a philosophy forum, or when you receive brain damage.Makes no difference to me personally, as a regular ol’ human being, that one part of my brain communicates with another such that I feel good or bad about something, or whatever else happens behind the curtain between my ears. Actually, I couldn’t possible care any less about it. That a certain neural pathway is triggered by a certain activation potential invokes not the slightest interest in me at all, when it occurs to me it’s time to go check the mailbox. — Mww
